Amazon-class sloop

HMS Dryad at anchor, with sails airing
Class overview
Name: Amazon-class sloops
Builders:
  • Pembroke Dockyard
  • Devonport Dockyard
Operators:  Royal Navy
Built: 1865–1866
In commission: 1865–1885
Completed: 6
Lost: 2
General characteristics
Type: Screw sloop
Displacement: 1574 tons
Length: 187 ft (57 m)
Beam: 36 ft (11 m)
Draught: 17 ft (5.2 m)[1]
Installed power: 300 horsepower[1]
Propulsion:
  • Single screw
  • Two-cylinder horizontal single-expansion steam engine
Sail plan: Barque
Complement: 150[1]
Armament:

The Amazon class was a class of six screw sloops of wooden construction built for the Royal Navy between 1865 and 1866.

Construction

Design

Designed by Edward Reed,[2] the Royal Navy Director of Naval Construction, they were equipped with a ram bow.[2] The hull was of wooden construction, but they were the first class of sloops to incorporate a form of composite construction; they had iron cross beams while retaining wooden framing.[2]

Propulsion

Propulsion was provided by a two-cylinder horizontal single-expansion steam engine by Ravenhill, Salkeld & Company driving a single 15 ft (4.6 m) screw. Vestal and Nymphe were fitted with three-cylinder Maudslay engines.[2]

Sail plan

All the ships of the class were built with a barque rig.[2]

Armament

The class was designed with two 7-inch (6½-ton) muzzle-loading rifled guns mounted on slides on centre-line pivots, and two 64-pounder muzzle-loading rifled guns on broadside trucks. Dryad, Nymphe and Vestal were rearmed in the early 1870s with an armament of nine 64-pounder muzzle-loading rifled guns, four each side and a centre-line pivot mount at the bow.[2]

Ships

NameShip BuilderLaunchedFate
AmazonPembroke Dockyard1865Sunk in collision with SS Osprey, off Start Point, English Channel 10 July 1866[1]
VestalPembroke Dockyard 1865Sold to Castle for breaking in December 1884[2]
NiobeDevonport Dockyard 1866Wrecked off Cape Blanc on Miquelon Island, off the Atlantic Coast of Newfoundland and Labrador 21 May 1874[1]
DryadDevonport Dockyard 1866Sold in September 1885 and broken up in April 1886[2]
DaphnePembroke Dockyard 1866Sold for breaking on 7 November 1882[2]
NympheDevonport Dockyard 1866Sold for breaking in December 1884[2]

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 "Cruisers at Battleships-Cruisers website". Retrieved 2008-09-17.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Winfield, Rif & Lyon, David (2004). The Sail and Steam Navy List: All the Ships of the Royal Navy 1815–1889. London: Chatham Publishing. ISBN 978-1-86176-032-6. OCLC 52620555.

Bibliography

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